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Type I X-ray burst emission reflected into the eclipses of EXO 0748-676

Type I X-ray burst emission reflected into the eclipses of EXO 0748-676
Type I X-ray burst emission reflected into the eclipses of EXO 0748-676
The neutron star X-ray binary, EXO 0748--676, was observed regularly by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) and XMM-Newton during its first detected outburst (1985 - 2008). These observations captured hundreds of asymmetric, energy-dependent X-ray eclipses, influenced by the ongoing ablation of the companion star and numerous Type I thermonuclear X-ray bursts. Here, we present the light curves of 22 Type I X-ray bursts observed by RXTE that coincide, fully or partially, with an X-ray eclipse. We identify nine instances where the burst occurs entirely within totality, seven bursts split across an egress, and six cases interrupted by an ingress. All in-eclipse bursts and split bursts occurred while the source was in the hard spectral state. We establish that we are not observing direct burst emission during eclipses since the companion star and the ablated outflow entirely obscure our view of the X-ray emitting region. We determine that the reflected flux from the outer accretion disc, even if maximally flared, is insufficient to explain all observations of in-eclipse X-ray bursts and instead explore scenarios whereby the emission arising from the X-ray bursts is scattered, either by a burst-induced rise in $N_{\rm{H}}$ that provides extra material, an accretion disc wind or the ablated outflow into our line of sight. However, the rarity of a burst and eclipse overlap makes it challenging to determine their origin.
astro-ph.HE
1365-2966
2058-2074
Knight, Amy H.
394b1ae4-038f-43d2-bb70-96d030ef2c6e
van den Eijnden, Jakob
de845e38-fdcb-4c9e-a04e-59b5b4dfaebc
Ingram, Adam
1021c5fa-839f-47aa-992c-1e242da42596
Matthews, James H.
7c623891-70ae-4808-8e75-83f7973cae35
Motta, Sara E.
2c9cd6cb-e027-46b7-92ce-2ace8a0154ff
Middleton, Matthew
f91b89d9-fd2e-42ec-aa99-1249f08a52ad
Mancuso, Giulio C.
ac7509c1-5491-4d83-8835-05ae6ba1db01
Buisson, Douglas J. K.
acda22fd-c9b6-489c-87ae-f529285f5cb4
Altamirano, Diego
d5ccdb09-0b71-4303-9538-05b467be075b
Fender, Rob
e0bf6c76-6b0c-457f-87a8-b726cae20c1e
Roberts, Timothy P.
c9042178-0c23-4150-a55a-a427edcef58e
Knight, Amy H.
394b1ae4-038f-43d2-bb70-96d030ef2c6e
van den Eijnden, Jakob
de845e38-fdcb-4c9e-a04e-59b5b4dfaebc
Ingram, Adam
1021c5fa-839f-47aa-992c-1e242da42596
Matthews, James H.
7c623891-70ae-4808-8e75-83f7973cae35
Motta, Sara E.
2c9cd6cb-e027-46b7-92ce-2ace8a0154ff
Middleton, Matthew
f91b89d9-fd2e-42ec-aa99-1249f08a52ad
Mancuso, Giulio C.
ac7509c1-5491-4d83-8835-05ae6ba1db01
Buisson, Douglas J. K.
acda22fd-c9b6-489c-87ae-f529285f5cb4
Altamirano, Diego
d5ccdb09-0b71-4303-9538-05b467be075b
Fender, Rob
e0bf6c76-6b0c-457f-87a8-b726cae20c1e
Roberts, Timothy P.
c9042178-0c23-4150-a55a-a427edcef58e

Knight, Amy H., van den Eijnden, Jakob, Ingram, Adam, Matthews, James H., Motta, Sara E., Middleton, Matthew, Mancuso, Giulio C., Buisson, Douglas J. K., Altamirano, Diego, Fender, Rob and Roberts, Timothy P. (2025) Type I X-ray burst emission reflected into the eclipses of EXO 0748-676. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 538 (3), 2058-2074. (doi:10.1093/mnras/staf395).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The neutron star X-ray binary, EXO 0748--676, was observed regularly by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) and XMM-Newton during its first detected outburst (1985 - 2008). These observations captured hundreds of asymmetric, energy-dependent X-ray eclipses, influenced by the ongoing ablation of the companion star and numerous Type I thermonuclear X-ray bursts. Here, we present the light curves of 22 Type I X-ray bursts observed by RXTE that coincide, fully or partially, with an X-ray eclipse. We identify nine instances where the burst occurs entirely within totality, seven bursts split across an egress, and six cases interrupted by an ingress. All in-eclipse bursts and split bursts occurred while the source was in the hard spectral state. We establish that we are not observing direct burst emission during eclipses since the companion star and the ablated outflow entirely obscure our view of the X-ray emitting region. We determine that the reflected flux from the outer accretion disc, even if maximally flared, is insufficient to explain all observations of in-eclipse X-ray bursts and instead explore scenarios whereby the emission arising from the X-ray bursts is scattered, either by a burst-induced rise in $N_{\rm{H}}$ that provides extra material, an accretion disc wind or the ablated outflow into our line of sight. However, the rarity of a burst and eclipse overlap makes it challenging to determine their origin.

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Accepted/In Press date: 5 March 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 March 2025
Published date: 24 March 2025
Keywords: astro-ph.HE

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501062
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501062
ISSN: 1365-2966
PURE UUID: 94e06c07-d024-45c3-8885-d49425d721d1
ORCID for Diego Altamirano: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3422-0074

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Date deposited: 21 May 2025 16:54
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:10

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Contributors

Author: Amy H. Knight
Author: Jakob van den Eijnden
Author: Adam Ingram
Author: James H. Matthews
Author: Sara E. Motta
Author: Giulio C. Mancuso
Author: Douglas J. K. Buisson
Author: Rob Fender
Author: Timothy P. Roberts

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